Date: Fri 22-Dec-1995
Date: Fri 22-Dec-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
Jim-Shortt-feed-store
Full Text:
w/photo: New Feed Store Opens In Sandy Hook
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Jim Shortt opened his "Feed & More Store" on Riverside Road after nearly 20
years in the construction industry, but his interest in agriculture dates back
to his childhood.
A 1975 graduate of Nonnewaug High School's agricultural program, he raised
chickens as a kid growing up in Newtown and listened to his father talk about
growing up on a farm. But like his father, he wound up in construction where
there was more money to be made.
Now, almost two decades after he established Jim Shortt Construction, Inc.,
Jim finally is getting back to his first interest. In the building that many
residents may remember as the former John Stefanko warehouse, he opened a feed
store and gift shop next to the garage bays where he keeps his construction
equipment.
There are 30 chickens - Rhode Island Reds - out back which provide the fresh
brown eggs that Jim sells in the store. This week he's installing a cooler to
sell milk and orange juice along with the maple syrup, honey, pancake mix,
preserves and other specialty items that he stocks.
"I used to keep trucks in this space back in the 1980s when I had my own
residential remodeling business and had men working for me," he said. "But I
gave up that kind of work to do commercial remodeling about five years ago
because I was doing a lot of work for Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals in
Danbury and they have enough to keep me steadily busy."
The closing of Newtown Feed & Cider on Route 302 left the town without a feed
store, a niche that Jim Shortt decided he could fill.
"People had to drive to Monroe, Bethel or Southbury (to buy feed) and I
thought this would be much more convenient," he said. "People seem to be very
positive about it."
He sells all types of animal feeds, from those for pigs and goats to llamas
and rabbits. There's a full line of Purina and Nutrena feeds, plus loose
grains and bird seeds, wood shavings, feeding and bedding hay. There are
gardening tools, plants from Mr Shortt's adjacent greenhouse, fertilizers and
natural pesticides plus hard-to-find items like Bag Balm (traditionally used
on cow's udders but also a popular winter remedy for chapped hands).
Last June Jim's mother, Laura Shortt, opened Dolly's Gift Shop, at the store,
where she sells some antiques and collectibles plus small giftware such as
planters and potpourri. There are handmade candles and stained glass ornaments
made by local crafters.
On a front table are gift baskets specially made up for different interests.
One features garden implements and bird seed, another has honey, maple syrup,
pancake and biscuit mixes, a third has dog biscuits and the like. On the front
of the shop, which is set several hundred feet behind the large commercial
building at 52 Riverside Road, are wreaths made from fresh greens, priced at
just $5 and $7.
Next summer Jim Shortt plans to expand the variety of organic vegetables he
grows in a quarter-acre garden behind the shop. The vegetables are picked as
they ripen and displayed on tables alongside the building.
"I plan to run a canopy the length of the building over the tables next
summer," he said. "And I intend to raise 150 turkeys to sell fresh for
Thanksgiving. I raised and sold 24 of those when I was a youngster, too."
On the weekends his fiance, Toni Richards, helps out in the store and
sometimes his dad, James Shortt, Sr, is there, too.
The store has been growing slowly but steadily because Jim Shortt believes in
paying as you go, not in borrowing money and running the risk of
over-extending as he tests the market for his products. He's pleased to find
that what he was interested in as a child is coming back into public
appreciation slowly but surely.
"Life's a circle - what's old is new again," he said, scratching the head of
the shop cat, Stubby, a tail-less maimed stray which he adopted and nursed
back to robust health.
In the winter months, the store is open seven days a week from 9 am to 5 pm.
For more information, call 426-9283.
